Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 273, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1933 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
pur-
» . - ... .. o-----------------------.
The News has no interest in promoting
any private business except that we are aware
of the fact that every successful business in
the town is an asset to the community just
to the extent that it is succesful ... In this
connection we make this appeal for the reten-
tion of the local cotton exchange office . . .
To all who are in any way interested in the
current quotations of any kind the advan-
tages of a local office are outstanding . . . We
have been informed by the operators of ths
local office that unless the patronage of the
community or an appreciable amount of it is
given the office it will be impossible to con-
tinue the leased wire service for the ex-
change ... An ad will be found in today’s is-
. sue of the News from the local exchange . . .
It is noted in the ad that the local office is a
member of the New Orleans Cotton Ex-
change, and maintains a complete brokerage
service . . . Slocks of any kind can be
chased through the local exchange on the
same brokerage basis as can be had from any
exchange office in the United States, and at
the same time, the brokerage commissions
will be left in Henderson and bo used in the
maintenance of the local offices, as against
all of it going out to some other office . . .
The News would urge all who trade in stocks,
bonds or other exchange commodities to make
use of the local exchange, thereby contribut-
ing just that much to keeping another busi-
ness going in Henderson. We are informed
by Mr. Rumfield, manager of the Henderson
Exchange that unless the patronage increases
during the month of February, or that is, un-
less those who have been trading in this class
of business accord the local office the pat-
ronage due it he will be forced to discontinue
the office March first . . . We don't have any
business that we can afford to lose . . . We
don't have any people that we can afford to
lose, so we would urge every co-operation
possible be given the local cotton exchange in
order that it will be able to continue to be of
^.■ervice to Henderson investors and specula-
tors.
It is evident that President-elect Roose-
velt has in store some big things for Amer-
ica .. . He has just issued a statement con-
cerning the program of activity he expects to
rush through, or that is, begin on as soon as
he becomes President . . . The first item ac-
cording to the statement issued by the in<*bm-
ing President deals with the Muscle Shoals
project . . . We are not sufficiently familiar
with the project to discuss it in detail, but it
is reported that trig program will call for the
employment of approximately 200,000 men.
. » « . There is a considerable element of dan-
ger in this project however, because it marks
another step in the program of Government
engaging in private business and is fraught
With dangers . . . The main iuea behind the
Tiesident-elect’s purpose though seems to be
that relief must be had for America ... A
new day for America is the slogan to be car-
ried out during the new administration . . .
Franklin D. Roosevelt has demonstrated the
fact that he is one of the ablest leaders in all
the country . . . We are willing to leave the
matter until further down the line, hoping all
along that the most good will come from it to
ail the people.
Ki.
' ' o------------------------------------
KjMjp .1 Your business men are live and up-to-
date. Their stores are fully stocked with up-
to-the-minute. seasonable merchandise of
<|ua rpd at prices that can’t be beat. Buy
*****
PAGE FOUR
Managing Editor
Qeutga Bowman
7 ■
I year (In advance) ....
a month! <ln advance)
k month- (tn advance) .
J month ——
1 nontha (Ln advance)----
«. uontha i In advance) ------
1 year (in advance)-------
SUBSCKHTION RATES
Delivered by carrier in Henderson
-..........1 5«
--------
.........13 UV
________W.oe
la com of errora or omiaalona occurring In local
or other ad vert Ur men (a or of omlaaiona on achod-
Mlad date the publisher! do not hold themaalvea
Mabie for damages further than the amount receiver
My thorn for such advertisement!.
10? South Mar»nall Street
Henderson. Texas
Published every afternoon (Except Saturday
•nd Sunday by
NEWS FUBlJaHLNG COMPANY
D. R. Harrla, President
»"
K t'
Entered at the post office at Henderson, Texaa
aa second class matter under Act of Congress March
a i«?».
NOTICE
Any erroneous reflection upon the character.
Standing or reputation of any person, firm or cor.
poraUoa which may appear in the columns of The
Henderson Dally News will be gladly corrected upon
Its being brought to the attention of the manage-
ment
BY MAIL
In Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and Oklahoma
J year (In advance) ........ |6.0U
* months (In advance)------------------$3.50
• month! (in advance) J2.WI
ML; -■.»
IN ALL OTHER STATES
-------S7.W
_______»4.00
_...»2.6U
IT
< HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON, TEXAS
FR
r
SPRING SONG
'.WAI It
I
/
/
111
J
ir
I
ov
HEALTH
Your
I
TALKS
Children
1
I
I
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
I
4
♦
i
>
»
—Mae Trailer.
5
I
6
NEW
urdh Gilbert Swan]
i
V
That gleaming spire of silver, spun
On the loom of a silver night,
Whispers to mo a solemn “Hush,”
And weaves a prayer of light,
Oh, little town in the moonlight’s glow,
Tonight, 'neath the prayerful sky,
There are only three who walk your streets,
- God and the moon and I!
Each silent, blue-green cedar tree
Puts back its shadow where
The searching moon may never find
It hiding from her there.
And every little frosted house,
Along this moon-whito street,
Guards well the echoes softly wrung
From careful, passing feet.
Oh, little town in the moonlight’s glow,
A-dream in the frost-rimmed hills,
Across your lap the winter moon
Her sliding river spills.
Along your moon-wrapped, whitened street
I pass with softened tread,
For I would not disturb the calm
Where deep blue shades lay spread.
Everybody can receive valuable infor-
mationby reading the advertisements in this
newspaper.
Now is the time when those engaged in
foreign relations are obliged to walk more
warily than usual and put in their statements
a definiteness which is usually conspicuous
by its absence.
Some merchants seem to think that be-
cause they have attractive; places of business
it is not necessary to advertise. They might
as well say that we don’t need cows because
the stores sell canned milk.
So
tin
ens
---s-----------o---------------
OH, LITTLE TOWN IN THE MOONLIGHT
cit ies.
down.
1
I
I
I
0>.
.
An
i>. i -
mg
< ■ .
v.§ I
• uid
Coui
Tl
I. I
Iron
spur
i 11
1 '
'I I
. ■ ■ ■ i
they
hidii
< ■
I A
IIK II
“ II
--------------O--------------
Money-saving opportunities can always
be found in the stores of the home city.
---o----
Home city merchants have great aims
and ambitions.
A
States
sionally, for the rest of the world, an inter-
esting one.
By DR MORRIS FISHBEIN
Editor, Journal of the Anver—
lean Medical Aasoclation,
and of Ilygela, the
Health Magazine
-------------------------O----------«•--------------
If we want to get out of this depression
within any reasonable time, we might just
as well appreciate the fact that such schemes
are bound to delay the return of prosperity.
No nation can be made prosperous by creat-
ing false economic standards and encourag-
ing agriculture and industry to increase pro-
duction when more production is not requir-
ed, and expect to make other people pay for
the surplus.
I note in an eastern city a movement to
have weekly pay-days instead of monthly
ones. In many sections the people would be
glad to have any kind of a pay-day.
It is impossible to keep a city growing
unless the home people are loyal enough to
spend their money in the home city. Buy at
home I
to?*
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEB. 3, 1933
--o---
It would bo impossible for your home
town merchants to maintain their reputations
of high grade merchandise at reasonable
prices without actually delivering the goods.
Buy at home! s''
J
0
EeMB
i i ■
can once more sing her song, there may be
another cataclysm waiting. 1 have seen many
panics. I have seen young married couples
go through all sorts of'soul-trying times. And
I have seen untrained men hopelessly tryimz
to turn out food in a smoked and clutter'd
kitchen while their wives battled with illness
in a bed upstairs.
Besides, I think it is fine for a man to
know what work cooking is. Perhaps then he
won't come home on wash day and fuss about
the biscuits being hard. Cooking ii work
and our future men may as well know it and
give credit where it is due.
luV
Antitoxin Effective in •
Control of Erysipelas
Numerous remedies have been develop-
ed for the treatment of erysipelas, including
all sorts of antiseptics and antitoxins. The
frequent use of hot or cold cloths helps to
diminish any pain associated with swelling
by taking down the swelling. If the eyelids
are involved it is customary to drop some
mild antiseptic solution, which any physician
can supply, directly into the eyes.
Efforts used to be made to control the
disease by painting on iodine, silver nitrate
or similar preparations, but modern authori-
ties feel that these accomplish little and be-
sides may so hide the spread of the disease
as to interfere with its control. Furthermore
these solutions stain the sleeping garments'
and bed linen.
Dr. Konrad Birkhaug, who has made spe-
cial studies of this condition recommends in-
stead the use of compresses soaked in an ice-
cold saturated solution of magnesium sul-
phate (or Epsom salts). If these cloths are
kept cold and applied repeatedly they offer
great relief but will not stop the spread of
the erysipelas.
In 1926, Dr. Birkaug developed a specific
antitoxin to be used in erysipelas only by a
physician. W hen this antitoxin is injected
there is usually a prompt improvement in the
toxic depression, a lessening of the fever and
a slowing of the rapid pulse rate within 12 to
18 hours. Moreover, there is a quicker con-
trol of the spread of the swelling and infec-
tion of the skin.
By this time thousands of cases have
been treated with this antitoxin and it is gen-
erally recognized as an important measure
for the control of erysipelas.
Because erysipelas, like other infectious
diseases, tends to break dowt the blood and
weaken the patients generally, it is well to
give people who are sick wit herysipelas plen-
ty of fluids, actually forcing them to drink
not less than 10 and as man yas 16 glasses of
water daily.
It is also well to have the food easy to
digest and nourishing. There is danger in
using too much cathartic because of irrita-
tion of the bowel during the presence of a se-
rious infection.
A person who has once had erysipelas is
likely to have it again and again. It is rec-
ommended that such people be exceedingly
careful about picking the nose or scratching
the ear. If these parts of the skin are ex-
ceedingly irritated they should be kept cov-
ered wyth mild ointments or cold cream.
One of the most foolish things a motor-
ist can do is to attempt to “cut in” between
two cars that are meeting each other. Many
of the fatal accidents can be traced to this
practice. Most of us have seen drivers of
cars take their life in their hands -in this
way.
--------0------—--
Now should keep your dollars working
in your own home city and-help to make it
better.
Q
Mi-
.__________
presidential election in the United
is always an exciting time and occa-
At present this country appears to be
subjected to a wave of violent crime. Bank
robberies and holdups are quite frequent,
and if conditions do not injprove the law-
abiding citizen will find it necessary to pack
a gun as a life preserver.
—
Salty Paradox
NEW YORK, — Notes on nothing in
particular and everything in general. John
Masefield, England’s poet-laureate now visit-
ing these shores, has written his loveliest and
best known verses about the sea. He has
sung the “sea urge” and of returning to tall
masts and ship’s wheels . . . But fact is, lie
almost always gets sea-sick and hesitates to
make long trips by water.
News of the Cohans
And one of the most interesting new
year’s tidings on Broadway concerns the de-
cision of George M. Cohan, Jr., to give his the-
atrical talents a try . . . Thus, it is assured
that the grand old “Yankee Doodle line” will
not vanish from the stage . . . For a couple of
years, there has been uncertainty and varied
rumors . . . George Jr. has been growing up
... He is nearing 20 ... At school he has
shown a tendency to veer toward engineering
. . . George Sr., while sentimentally hoping to
keep the famous old Four Cohan clan going,
has never used any pressure, leaving things
to time.
Meanwhile, he saw to it that his son
grew up with nimble feet . . . So, when the
next summer vacation arrives, George Jr. will
make his bow as an actor in one of the resort
stock companies of Maine . . . And the tale
goes that the son insists on playing those
roles which made the name of Cohan synony-
mous with Broadway for many a year . , .
Such as “45 Minutes From Broadway” and
“Little Johnny Jones.”
George Sr. had taken to the road with a
new play and was joined over the holiday pe-
riod by his son ... It is then, so go the stories
that an agreement was reached.
Some Other Sons
Young Cohan is one of several sons of
the theater to step forward during the year.
. . . Owen Davis, Jr., made his bow to collab-
orating with his play-writing father on “The
Good Earth” . . . Practically all the Barry-
mores and Colts arrived either on the stage or
screen . . . The sons of both Gallagher and
Shean teamed up in an act based on the “old
Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean” idea . . . The
two Chaplin lads have been trotted out, only
to step into parental legal squabbles.
Broadway Bartering
That pretty maid seen about these
nights with Jack Dempsey is June Gale, of
the Gale Sister act. .. But there’s nothing se-
rious, they say . . . Alma McMahon, actress,
gets many of her stage adornments from the
Orchard Street pushcart peddlers, because
she loves to bargain with them and rummage
through their trinkets.
Speaking of bargaining, recalls that the
“swapping” idea now has spread even to the
elite night spots . . . The other evening the
Place Pigalle, one of the swankier resorts,
allowed customers to swap such Christmas »
presents as they didn’t want... And did they
want to get rid of the Santa Claus loot?
Dreams Come True
Boyhood dreams sometimes do material-
ize on Broadway . . . Take George Haight and
Allan Scott.. . They were boyhood playmates
in Arlington, N. J . . . Went to the same
grammer school and romped in the same
sandlots . . . When college came, they went in
different directions, but they had several
plays as good as written right then and there
. . . Years went by and found them both in
the Broadway belt, following different theat-
rical trails . . . But they did get together on
“that play” and “that play” is “Goodbye
Again,” which looks like a laugh hit.
--o---
No matter what your wants may be, you
can find merchandise in your own home city
that will fully meet your every requirement.
Buy at home I
shut up you/
— r wzxNir to
APPRECIATE
THIS*
$
Men with a public spirit make better
Men without public spirit drag them
Must Face Facts
It is too bad that men have to turn to
these things. I am not one who thinks the
male is at his best or happiest doing house-
work and playing nursemaid.
* But what we have to face are facts.
Facts tell us that when things are in utter
chaos as they are now with unemployment,
or illness, or both, it’s a case of catch as catch
can. If mama happens to have landed a jjob
and papa can’t get a tiling, it is up to him tn
act as holder-down-of-thc-house, pro tern at
least.
These boys arc probably thinking, “Oh.
heck! How silly! We'll never need to cook.”
We hope not, but who knows what is
•head ? Even if times boom again and Pippa
C-A___V I Ft I-------
—'' 177
----o---------------
Your home town merchants have the
good-will and confidence of the majority of
the citizens of the home city. Every one
should buy from local merchants. Buy at
home!
Train The Boys in Looking
So the boys are learning to cook. The
paper carried a whole page of pictures recent-
ly, of high school boys in caps and aprons,
bending over biscuit pans and mixing bowls.
I do think there is one mistake about all
this. If you want to make a real cook out of
anybody you’ve got to catch ’em young. Not
at an age when anything out of the prescrib-
ed routine will be approached with self-con-
sciousness or even disgust.
However, they are learning in spite of
themselves. And what does this tell us?
That the inevitable has happened. If wo-
men are compelled to go out arid make a liv-
ing in the business world, it is quite as fate-
ful that men will on occasion have to assume
domestic responsibility.
It’s a Good Thing
Nothing ever happens until the times
say, “It has to be done.” Then we get busy
and start a new wrinkle.
To be less facetitious, this matter of
men knowing about cooking is about the best
thing that can happen. If I were the domes-
tic science teacher I should include a course
in baby food, too, scalding milk, boiling bot-
tles, cooking cereals three hours and strain-
ing them, making custards and junket, cod-
dling eggs, fixing orange juice and tomato
juice, and concocting that old stand-by when
fevers come up, orange juice and strained
white of egg, known as orange albumen.
And then let them clean up the mess
brush out bottles and boil them, scrape out
strainers and scald them, learn to do every-
thing the girls are learning to do these days,
. and that young mothers bend their' weary
backs over day after day.
Because you never can tell what may
happen. The world is full of young fathers
today with sick or employed wives who find
themselves utterly helpless in looking after
the baby.
r
I
I
I
4=
■
I
I
II
r
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 273, Ed. 1 Friday, February 3, 1933, newspaper, February 3, 1933; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1309971/m1/4/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.